BitTorrent drops its trackers

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Anti-piracy operatives have lost an edge over illegal downloaders of movies and software thanks to a new feature in BitTorrent.

BitTorrent creator Bram Cohen has eliminated the need for Web site hosting of centralised files, known as trackers, in the latest beta of the peer-to-peer software. These easily located files have been a key resource for anti-piracy units in identifying people downloading and sharing copyrighted material.

The change may cause problems in shutting down the illegal online distribution of software and content, according to the Business Software Alliance, an industry group.

"Currently, if a tracker site is shut down, many downloads are disrupted," said Tarun Sawney, BSA Asia antipiracy director. "So removing the trackers from the equation will obviously cause those of us on this side of the battle to regroup."

However, Sawney pointed out that BitTorrent files could still be identified. "BSA has traditionally sought the assistance of those hosting the actual pirated files. With or without the tracker sites, someone still hosts the infringing files," he said.

While BitTorrent's Cohen said the tracker removal feature is part of his ongoing effort to make publishing files online "painless and disruptively cheap", the move is only one of several designed to remove BitTorrent's dependence on centralised trackers.

Several of the Internet's largest tracker sites, such as SuprNova.org, were shut down in December following legal action by industry bodies including the Motion Picture Association of America. Similar legal action by Australia's music piracy investigations unit recently targeted local Internet provider Swiftel.

One development effort by Exeem, the group behind the once-popular SuprNova.org, aims to decentralise the BitTorrent protocol in the style of peer-to-peer networks like Kazaa, while a similar effort to Cohen's was announced earlier this month by the developers of advanced Java-based multi-platform BitTorrent client software Azuerus.

Renai LeMay reported from Sydney for ZDNet Australia. For more ZDNet Australia stories, click here.

Talkback

Bittorrent is used for a lot more than piracy.
Sure there maybe a small percentage of people out their pirating stuff (as there always has and always will be), but the majority of it's use is by software programmers like myself who relies on its flexability and (primarily) its ability to allow people without expensive web-servers to distribute sofware efficiently.

I hate it how the small percentage of illegal users make people think Bittorrent is illegal software. Sure, the piraters may show up as a large chunk of bandwidth and have quite a high percentage by bandwidth, but thats because piracy tends to be of extremely high band-width items (like films and TV shows).

Most users of Bittorrent use it for the legitamte purpose of distributing (and recieving) open-source software which is often done by people like myself which don't have access to a large commercial companies web-server.

This addition of a trackerless protocol is great because it means the one remaining centralised link, putting it on some big companies (or organisation's) website for people to download is taken out.

When the U.S. government (who's current president's campaign was sponsored by Microsoft), uses the DMCA to try and ban all open source software websites, it means people like myself will still be able to distribute software.

And thats definatly a good thing!

via Facebook 23 May, 2005 16:42
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